Determining the Storage Capacity of a Saltwater Disposal Reservoir in Practice

Author:

Wu Xingru1,Childers David R.2,Dai Lei3,Shaffer Kelly4

Affiliation:

1. University of Oklahoma

2. Wu & Childers Energy Solutions LLC

3. Southwest Petroleum University

4. Occam Petro Solutions LLC

Abstract

Abstract Produced water is commonly co-produced with oil and gas production and requires safe disposal in subsurface reservoirs. Knowing the amount of produced water that can be safely injected into the reservoir is important for disposal operations. While the methods of reservoir hydrocarbon storage are abundant in literature, the granularity of handling water injection capacity is rare, probably due to the misconception that production is similar to injection into a formation. The knowledge of hydrocarbon reservoir petrophysics shines some light on the problem. However, it is far from sufficient to make an economically viable decision as injecting water into the reservoir dramatically differs from producing it. Many practitioners take for granted that knowing the pore volume of the target formation would be sufficient to determine the storage volume. The actual water injection capacity is the product of the pore volume of the formation, total compressibility of the system, and maximum allowable pressure difference. Since the stress-strain relationship of a porous medium depends on the frequency and magnitude of the loading and unloading process, the total compressibility would be different. The maximum allowable injection pressure and reservoir pressure are functions of in-situ stresses, injection temperature and pressure, and reservoir geomechanical parameters, all of which have significant uncertainty. In practical design, we must consider all parameters and their respective uncertainties. This paper presents a procedure for determining the injection capacity through an in-depth discussion of involved parameters and their associated uncertainties from estimation and measurements. This paper will also demonstrate our practice using a field example as our case study to show our suggested approach.

Publisher

SPE

Reference16 articles.

1. Mechanism of casing deformation in the Changning-Weiyuan national shale gas demonstration area and countermeasures;Chen;Natural Gas Industry B,2017

2. Childers, DR and Wu, X. 2021. Mitigating Fault Activation From Injection Activity Through the Application of the Connected Reservoir Storage Model. Proc., 55th US Rock Mechanics/Geomechanics Symposium.

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